"We are not against the use of the internet, but we are against the broadcast of obscene and immoral material, and material on the internet that is against Islam," AIP quoted Taleban Foreign Minister Maulvi Wakil Ahmed Muttawakil as saying.

He said the Taleban wanted to establish a system through which they could control incoming and outgoing information.

No infrastructure

With the war-torn country's infrastructure in ruins, it is practically impossible to connect to the internet using Afghanistan's country code.

Foreign aid agencies and the few Afghans who can afford computers and electricity connect to the internet through the few telephone lines provided by neighbouring Pakistan.

Mr Muttawakil said there was a problem monitoring those calls.

"The government cannot censor these because they are controlled from the communications centre exchange, which is not in Afghanistan but in Pakistan," he said.

AIP did not specify when the ban on the internet was imposed and how long the Taleban intended to uphold it.

Universities abroad not recognised

In another measure aimed at blocking outside influences, the Taleban have reportedly decided to stop recognising academic qualifications from universities outside the country.

Taleban radio said the qualifications from the Afghan University in Peshawar, Pakistan, in particular, would not be accepted.

Out of the university's 3,000 students, mostly Afghan refugees, 700 are women.